---
slug: /en/sql-reference/functions/encryption-functions
sidebar_position: 70
sidebar_label: Encryption
---

These functions  implement encryption and decryption of data with AES (Advanced Encryption Standard) algorithm.

Key length depends on encryption mode. It is 16, 24, and 32 bytes long for `-128-`, `-196-`, and `-256-` modes respectively.

Initialization vector length is always 16 bytes (bytes in excess of 16 are ignored).

Note that these functions work slowly until ClickHouse 21.1.

## encrypt

This function encrypts data using these modes:

- aes-128-ecb, aes-192-ecb, aes-256-ecb
- aes-128-cbc, aes-192-cbc, aes-256-cbc
- aes-128-ofb, aes-192-ofb, aes-256-ofb
- aes-128-gcm, aes-192-gcm, aes-256-gcm
- aes-128-ctr, aes-192-ctr, aes-256-ctr

**Syntax**

``` sql
encrypt('mode', 'plaintext', 'key' [, iv, aad])
```

**Arguments**

- `mode` — Encryption mode. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).
- `plaintext` — Text that need to be encrypted. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).
- `key` — Encryption key. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).
- `iv` — Initialization vector. Required for `-gcm` modes, optional for others. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).
- `aad` — Additional authenticated data. It isn't encrypted, but it affects decryption. Works only in `-gcm` modes, for others would throw an exception. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).

**Returned value**

- Ciphertext binary string. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).

**Examples**

Create this table:

Query:

``` sql
CREATE TABLE encryption_test
(
    `comment` String,
    `secret` String
)
ENGINE = Memory;
```

Insert some data (please avoid storing the keys/ivs in the database as this undermines the whole concept of encryption), also storing 'hints' is unsafe too and used only for illustrative purposes:

Query:

``` sql
INSERT INTO encryption_test VALUES('aes-256-ofb no IV', encrypt('aes-256-ofb', 'Secret', '12345678910121314151617181920212')),\
('aes-256-ofb no IV, different key', encrypt('aes-256-ofb', 'Secret', 'keykeykeykeykeykeykeykeykeykeyke')),\
('aes-256-ofb with IV', encrypt('aes-256-ofb', 'Secret', '12345678910121314151617181920212', 'iviviviviviviviv')),\
('aes-256-cbc no IV', encrypt('aes-256-cbc', 'Secret', '12345678910121314151617181920212'));
```

Query:

``` sql
SELECT comment, hex(secret) FROM encryption_test;
```

Result:

``` text
┌─comment──────────────────────────┬─hex(secret)──────────────────────┐
│ aes-256-ofb no IV                │ B4972BDC4459                     │
│ aes-256-ofb no IV, different key │ 2FF57C092DC9                     │
│ aes-256-ofb with IV              │ 5E6CB398F653                     │
│ aes-256-cbc no IV                │ 1BC0629A92450D9E73A00E7D02CF4142 │
└──────────────────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────┘
```

Example with `-gcm`:

Query:

``` sql
INSERT INTO encryption_test VALUES('aes-256-gcm', encrypt('aes-256-gcm', 'Secret', '12345678910121314151617181920212', 'iviviviviviviviv')), \
('aes-256-gcm with AAD', encrypt('aes-256-gcm', 'Secret', '12345678910121314151617181920212', 'iviviviviviviviv', 'aad'));

SELECT comment, hex(secret) FROM encryption_test WHERE comment LIKE '%gcm%';
```

Result:

``` text
┌─comment──────────────┬─hex(secret)──────────────────────────────────┐
│ aes-256-gcm          │ A8A3CCBC6426CFEEB60E4EAE03D3E94204C1B09E0254 │
│ aes-256-gcm with AAD │ A8A3CCBC6426D9A1017A0A932322F1852260A4AD6837 │
└──────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────────────────┘
```

## aes_encrypt_mysql

Compatible with mysql encryption and resulting ciphertext can be decrypted with [AES_DECRYPT](https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/encryption-functions.html#function_aes-decrypt) function.

Will produce the same ciphertext as `encrypt` on equal inputs. But when `key` or `iv` are longer than they should normally be, `aes_encrypt_mysql` will stick to what MySQL's `aes_encrypt` does: 'fold' `key` and ignore excess bits of `iv`.

Supported encryption modes:

- aes-128-ecb, aes-192-ecb, aes-256-ecb
- aes-128-cbc, aes-192-cbc, aes-256-cbc
- aes-128-ofb, aes-192-ofb, aes-256-ofb

**Syntax**

``` sql
aes_encrypt_mysql('mode', 'plaintext', 'key' [, iv])
```

**Arguments**

- `mode` — Encryption mode. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).
- `plaintext` — Text that needs to be encrypted. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).
- `key` — Encryption key. If key is longer than required by mode, MySQL-specific key folding is performed. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).
- `iv` — Initialization vector. Optional, only first 16 bytes are taken into account [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).

**Returned value**

- Ciphertext binary string. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).

**Examples**

Given equal input `encrypt` and `aes_encrypt_mysql` produce the same ciphertext:

Query:

``` sql
SELECT encrypt('aes-256-ofb', 'Secret', '12345678910121314151617181920212', 'iviviviviviviviv') = aes_encrypt_mysql('aes-256-ofb', 'Secret', '12345678910121314151617181920212', 'iviviviviviviviv') AS ciphertexts_equal;
```

Result:

```
┌─ciphertexts_equal─┐
│                 1 │
└───────────────────┘
```

But `encrypt` fails when `key` or `iv` is longer than expected:

Query:

``` sql
SELECT encrypt('aes-256-ofb', 'Secret', '123456789101213141516171819202122', 'iviviviviviviviv123');
```

Result:

``` text
Received exception from server (version 22.6.1):
Code: 36. DB::Exception: Received from localhost:9000. DB::Exception: Invalid key size: 33 expected 32: While processing encrypt('aes-256-ofb', 'Secret', '123456789101213141516171819202122', 'iviviviviviviviv123').
```

While `aes_encrypt_mysql` produces MySQL-compatible output:

Query:

``` sql
SELECT hex(aes_encrypt_mysql('aes-256-ofb', 'Secret', '123456789101213141516171819202122', 'iviviviviviviviv123')) AS ciphertext;
```

Result:

```text
┌─ciphertext───┐
│ 24E9E4966469 │
└──────────────┘
```

Notice how supplying even longer `IV` produces the same result

Query:

``` sql
SELECT hex(aes_encrypt_mysql('aes-256-ofb', 'Secret', '123456789101213141516171819202122', 'iviviviviviviviv123456')) AS ciphertext
```

Result:

``` text
┌─ciphertext───┐
│ 24E9E4966469 │
└──────────────┘
```

Which is binary equal to what MySQL produces on same inputs:

``` sql
mysql> SET  block_encryption_mode='aes-256-ofb';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)

mysql> SELECT aes_encrypt('Secret', '123456789101213141516171819202122', 'iviviviviviviviv123456') as ciphertext;
+------------------------+
| ciphertext             |
+------------------------+
| 0x24E9E4966469         |
+------------------------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
```

## decrypt

This function decrypts ciphertext into a plaintext using these modes:

- aes-128-ecb, aes-192-ecb, aes-256-ecb
- aes-128-cbc, aes-192-cbc, aes-256-cbc
- aes-128-ofb, aes-192-ofb, aes-256-ofb
- aes-128-gcm, aes-192-gcm, aes-256-gcm
- aes-128-ctr, aes-192-ctr, aes-256-ctr

**Syntax**

``` sql
decrypt('mode', 'ciphertext', 'key' [, iv, aad])
```

**Arguments**

- `mode` — Decryption mode. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).
- `ciphertext` — Encrypted text that needs to be decrypted. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).
- `key` — Decryption key. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).
- `iv` — Initialization vector. Required for `-gcm` modes, Optional for others. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).
- `aad` — Additional authenticated data. Won't decrypt if this value is incorrect. Works only in `-gcm` modes, for others would throw an exception. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).

**Returned value**

- Decrypted String. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).

**Examples**

Re-using table from [encrypt](#encrypt).

Query:

``` sql
SELECT comment, hex(secret) FROM encryption_test;
```

Result:

``` text
┌─comment──────────────┬─hex(secret)──────────────────────────────────┐
│ aes-256-gcm          │ A8A3CCBC6426CFEEB60E4EAE03D3E94204C1B09E0254 │
│ aes-256-gcm with AAD │ A8A3CCBC6426D9A1017A0A932322F1852260A4AD6837 │
└──────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────────────────┘
┌─comment──────────────────────────┬─hex(secret)──────────────────────┐
│ aes-256-ofb no IV                │ B4972BDC4459                     │
│ aes-256-ofb no IV, different key │ 2FF57C092DC9                     │
│ aes-256-ofb with IV              │ 5E6CB398F653                     │
│ aes-256-cbc no IV                │ 1BC0629A92450D9E73A00E7D02CF4142 │
└──────────────────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────┘
```

Now let's try to decrypt all that data.

Query:

``` sql
SELECT comment, decrypt('aes-256-cfb128', secret, '12345678910121314151617181920212') as plaintext FROM encryption_test
```

Result:

``` text
┌─comment──────────────┬─plaintext──┐
│ aes-256-gcm          │ OQ�E
                             �t�7T�\���\�   │
│ aes-256-gcm with AAD │ OQ�E
                             �\��si����;�o�� │
└──────────────────────┴────────────┘
┌─comment──────────────────────────┬─plaintext─┐
│ aes-256-ofb no IV                │ Secret    │
│ aes-256-ofb no IV, different key │ �4�
                                        �         │
│ aes-256-ofb with IV              │ ���6�~        │
 │aes-256-cbc no IV                │ �2*4�h3c�4w��@
└──────────────────────────────────┴───────────┘
```

Notice how only a portion of the data was properly decrypted, and the rest is gibberish since either `mode`, `key`, or `iv` were different upon encryption.

## tryDecrypt

Similar to `decrypt`, but returns NULL if decryption fails because of using the wrong key.

**Examples**

Let's create a table where `user_id` is the unique user id, `encrypted` is an encrypted string field, `iv` is an initial vector for decrypt/encrypt. Assume that users know their id and the key to decrypt the encrypted field:

```sql
CREATE TABLE decrypt_null (
  dt DateTime,
  user_id UInt32,
  encrypted String,
  iv String
) ENGINE = Memory;
```

Insert some data:

```sql
INSERT INTO decrypt_null VALUES
    ('2022-08-02 00:00:00', 1, encrypt('aes-256-gcm', 'value1', 'keykeykeykeykeykeykeykeykeykey01', 'iv1'), 'iv1'),
    ('2022-09-02 00:00:00', 2, encrypt('aes-256-gcm', 'value2', 'keykeykeykeykeykeykeykeykeykey02', 'iv2'), 'iv2'),
    ('2022-09-02 00:00:01', 3, encrypt('aes-256-gcm', 'value3', 'keykeykeykeykeykeykeykeykeykey03', 'iv3'), 'iv3');
```

Query:

```sql
SELECT
    dt,
    user_id,
    tryDecrypt('aes-256-gcm', encrypted, 'keykeykeykeykeykeykeykeykeykey02', iv) AS value
FROM decrypt_null
ORDER BY user_id ASC
```

Result:

```
┌──────────────────dt─┬─user_id─┬─value──┐
│ 2022-08-02 00:00:00 │       1 │ ᴺᵁᴸᴸ   │
│ 2022-09-02 00:00:00 │       2 │ value2 │
│ 2022-09-02 00:00:01 │       3 │ ᴺᵁᴸᴸ   │
└─────────────────────┴─────────┴────────┘
```

## aes_decrypt_mysql

Compatible with mysql encryption and decrypts data encrypted with [AES_ENCRYPT](https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/encryption-functions.html#function_aes-encrypt) function.

Will produce same plaintext as `decrypt` on equal inputs. But when `key` or `iv` are longer than they should normally be, `aes_decrypt_mysql` will stick to what MySQL's `aes_decrypt` does: 'fold' `key` and ignore excess bits of `IV`.

Supported decryption modes:

- aes-128-ecb, aes-192-ecb, aes-256-ecb
- aes-128-cbc, aes-192-cbc, aes-256-cbc
- aes-128-cfb128
- aes-128-ofb, aes-192-ofb, aes-256-ofb

**Syntax**

``` sql
aes_decrypt_mysql('mode', 'ciphertext', 'key' [, iv])
```

**Arguments**

- `mode` — Decryption mode. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).
- `ciphertext` — Encrypted text that needs to be decrypted. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).
- `key` — Decryption key. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).
- `iv` — Initialization vector. Optional. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).

**Returned value**

- Decrypted String. [String](../../sql-reference/data-types/string.md#string).

**Examples**

Let's decrypt data we've previously encrypted with MySQL:

``` sql
mysql> SET  block_encryption_mode='aes-256-ofb';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)

mysql> SELECT aes_encrypt('Secret', '123456789101213141516171819202122', 'iviviviviviviviv123456') as ciphertext;
+------------------------+
| ciphertext             |
+------------------------+
| 0x24E9E4966469         |
+------------------------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
```

Query:

``` sql
SELECT aes_decrypt_mysql('aes-256-ofb', unhex('24E9E4966469'), '123456789101213141516171819202122', 'iviviviviviviviv123456') AS plaintext
```

Result:

``` text
┌─plaintext─┐
│ Secret    │
└───────────┘
```
